My op-ed on peak oil and global warming
http://progressive.org/global_warming_urgency.html
Carmelo Ruiz-Marrero is a Puerto Rican author, journalist and environmental educator.
We need to act urgently on global warming
It doesn’t matter whether we’ve hit peak oil yet. We still
must address global warming. We can’t wait for oil shortages to wean us
off our bad habits.
Peak oil is one of the decade’s hot subjects. According to this
thesis, proposed by geologist M. King Hubbert, somewhere in our future
an oil crunch will occur, as ever-increasing demand exhausts the
dwindling supply.
Back in 2009, British environmental polemicist George Monbiot warned
that the peak oil disaster was upon us. But in a July 2 London Guardian
column he did an about-face.
“We were wrong on peak oil,” he said. “There is enough to fry us all.”
While other energy experts took sides on this issue, the real
question isn’t where we are on the peak oil curve, but where we are on
the global warming front. And we’re getting dreadfully close to the
tipping point there.
Those who thought that peak oil would mean that the world economy
would “by necessity” embrace renewable energy were fooling themselves.
Even as the alarms were ringing, industry and consumers here remained
addicted to fossil fuels.
It’s just not true that the law of supply and demand will bring us
painlessly into a solar-powered, green utopia. Barring state
intervention and environmental activism, industrial civilization will
not rethink its oil addiction, any more than a shark can be talked into
going vegetarian. What peak oil means is that the quest for oil will
become more nasty, violent and desperate.
And if you expect some leftist ecological revolution in the Third
World to come to the planet’s rescue, think again. Latin America’s
left-leaning governments love oil as much as any capitalist does.
Socialist Bolivian President Evo Morales can talk all he wants about
the environment, but his country is now no less dependent on oil and
natural gas exports than it was under previous governments.
And under the leadership of the Workers’ Party, Brazil’s national oil
company Petrobras has become one of the world’s largest corporations.
Petrobras is now digging for oil in the Atlantic, in waters that are
deeper and more dangerous than where the Deepwater Horizon tragedy took
place.
What this means for the environment is that none of the peak oil
forecast models spare us from global warming’s worst-case scenario.
Whether or not we agree on the precise time of peak oil, we must band
together to change the economy’s course or face planetary catastrophe.
Local grassroots struggles against fossil fuel extraction operations,
like mountaintop removal and shale oil, are an essential part of this
effort.
Our window of opportunity for action is beginning to close. We do not have much time.
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